Wolf Winter (28 page)

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Authors: Cecilia Ekbäck

Tags: #Fiction, #Thrillers, #Suspense, #Mystery & Detective, #General

BOOK: Wolf Winter
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“His widow and child were later forced to leave the croft. They died in the plague.”

Poor sod. The priest wondered how Gustav had found out about his family.

She picked up another drawing. Nils was glaring out at him from within it.

“Nils was a public official. His father was ennobled under the King’s father. But what is interesting is Kristina …” She searched among the drawings on the table and found it, a large, blonde woman with steely eyes. “Kristina is from one of the oldest aristocratic families,” Sofia said.
De la Gardie,
she mouthed.

“Magnus Gabriel de la Gardie?” he asked, incredulous.

Sofia laughed. “Her grandfather.”

The priest chuckled. The de la Gardies had been the family most affected when the King’s father reduced the nobles’ privileges. Their fall from grace had been spectacular.

“And what about Nils?”

“Bribes,” she said.

Ah, the influences on the crown were many. Everybody wanted a piece. The priest had sometimes agreed with those who argued that
while the King fought battles abroad, the real war was being lost at home.
Treason,
the King called that kind of talk.
Believe in me, or you betray me.

“My friend said Nils went too far. At one stage he seemed to be in charge of Stockholm, before the King put a stop to it.”

The priest thought about Nils having requested a village to be built on Blackåsen. An attempt, most likely, to create a new little kingdom for himself.

“Anything else?”

She shook her head. “I asked them about the bishop. They know of him, of course, as he is on the Privy Council, but nobody had much to tell. They said that in the Council he mostly keeps silent. The King seems neutral in his regard. Someone said others were impressed with him down south, said that not many men of the Church knew to show such mercy. Otherwise, nothing. Nothing about Henrik or Daniel.”

“What circumstances?”

Sofia tilted her head. “What?”

“The bishop having shown mercy—in what circumstances?”

She shook her head. “I don’t know,” she said.

“De la Gardie,” he said again and shook his head.

They sat in silence. The priest thought of Gustav. So the dead reappeared on Blackåsen. It didn’t surprise him in the least.

“So what do we do?” he said after a while.

“We make friends,” Sofia said. “At our market I will introduce you to some people—the tax man, Mårten Broman, most importantly. He knows everyone down south. In the meantime perhaps you go and see Nils and Kristina. The world of the nobility is so small. They are bound still to have connections.”

She put her hand on his arm. He stiffened and didn’t look at her. Instead, he stared into the fire.

“I’ll empty the traps,” Frederika said to her mother.

“I only set them yesterday.”

Frederika kicked her shoe against the doorpost. “I want to see that they are still working. And who knows …”

“Fine,” her mother said. “Dorotea stays here, though.”

“Ah.” Frederika tried to sound regretful.

Her mother was watching her. Frederika grabbed her hat and pushed it down to hide her eyes.

“Bye,” she breathed.

She walked across the yard, ears tense, half-expecting her mother’s voice to call for her to stop. When she reached the forest, she began to run. She didn’t like to lie to her mother, and before, if she ever tried, her mother had known. But lately Frederika had discovered, with a mixture of excitement and regret, she was getting away with it. Perhaps her mother was growing old or perhaps her mother’s mind was busy with other things, but she both saw and heard less than she used to.

Frederika was not far from Elin’s homestead, but she had to slow down. Her arm was throbbing, and she was worried that the wound would begin to bleed again. She had cleaned it and pressed the sides of the cut together while binding her arm tightly with a piece of cloth, but it was a large gash, and she wasn’t certain it would hold. Otherwise she would have to tell her mother and they’d have to sew the wound. She hoped it wouldn’t come to that. She had to rid herself of Eriksson before something worse happened. She had to find out what happened to him. And it seemed Eriksson wanted her to begin with Elin.

Frederika stood for a long time looking at Elin’s house, wondering if she dared. Then she thought of Eriksson and sighed. It had to
be done. She crossed the yard, and nothing moved. In fact, it was much too quiet. She steeled herself and walked faster. She ran up the stairs to the porch, not certain whether the worst evil was inside or outside.

The cottage had frozen in time. The floorboards were a solid white and didn’t squeak and moan as she walked on them. They were just mute. The walls glittered. There were ice roses on the windows. The fireplace gaped black. Frederika shivered. Elin had found something out, something that had destroyed her. Was it who had killed Eriksson? But then why hadn’t she just told someone?

Frederika opened the cupboards in the kitchen and lifted the cutlery. Nothing. There was a wooden hamper on the floor by the kitchen settle with wool thread, a pair of scissors, and needles. She lifted the flower pots with their shriveled plants, with her fingers she combed through the frozen shoe grass in its wooden chest, searched among the wood in the wood basket. She touched the settle, stroked its back with her fingers.

How did you find out whatever it was that shocked you?
She sent the thought to Elin.
It seemed like you and your children didn’t leave your homestead much after that time I met you by the river. You didn’t come to harvest the sedge. The only time anyone saw you was at church, and then nobody spoke with you.

She looked toward the bedroom. She didn’t want to go in there. Her mother had said that was where it happened. What if something was still in there? She bit her teeth together hard and advanced toward the door. She looked in, heart beating, ready to run. But the room was so empty, it seemed quite possible nobody had ever lived there. There was no telling that this room had seen despair, and whatever blood there had once been had now faded to matted brown.

The bedding had been removed, but Frederika lifted the stained mattresses one by one to see underneath them. There was nothing. She opened the cupboards and took out the clothes and shook them. She did the same with the bed linen. Nothing. On a windowsill were some stones and sticks that the children had probably played with.

Frederika thought about what Eriksson had said, about “those of her sort” having gifts. She put her hands flat on the cold house wall. She breathed and closed her eyes.
Who did Elin meet?
she asked the timber.
Did someone come to visit?
The walls were silent.

Oh, this was silly. She pushed off the wall.

Besides, nobody would have come. People were afraid of Elin after her husband’s death.

Apart from the killer,
she thought then. He would have known there was nothing to be afraid of.

You found something out,
Frederika thought again.
It destroyed you, but still you didn’t tell anybody. You must have been really frightened.

The light was going fast. The air was dusky when she knocked on the door. Eriksson had talked of that which was damaged, she thought. And there was one more person she thought of as damaged.

Gustav opened.

“Can I come in?” she asked.

The scar underneath his nose kept his mouth open. She took a step forward, and he let her into his hallway.

She ought to have planned what she was going to say. “I’d like to ask about Elin,” she said.

He stared at her.

“I didn’t know Elin,” he said.

He could be lying,
she thought. Frederika tried to catch his eye like Jutta had taught her, to see what was inside. “Relax,” Jutta had said. “Try to float into me and tell me what you see.”

Lake-summer. It was warm and the small flies droned above them.

Frederika had giggled.

“Serious, now,” Jutta said.

Frederika concentrated.

“No,” Jutta said. “Not like that. Don’t try so hard. Float. Relax.”

Frederika had tried and tried. Then she’d given up and lain down on her back. Jutta’s head above her was covering the sun, her thin hair swaying around her head like the halo on Maria in the painting in their church. Frederika smelled her hair—algae, chamomile. She wanted to put her nose in it. And then she just slipped into Jutta’s eyes and there was red love and a little girl named Frederika.

She had laughed. Jutta smiled, but not for long.

“Use this gift with care,” she’d said. “Secrets are most often awful.”

Now Frederika looked Gustav in the eye in that same way. She smiled at him. At first Gustav’s eyes were blue. A sea. The rings from a jumping fish.

Not rings. An opening. A hole in the earth. A den of an animal? Shackles attached to a stone wall. The iron soiled black.

Pain. Pain so huge she hadn’t known it existed.

Frederika walked backward. And then she ran.

She ran as fast as she could, along the lake, into the forest. Her throat ached. Her gasps for air sounded like sobs.

Not far from home two hands grabbed her and she howled. It was Antti. She still screamed. He swirled her around and wrapped his arms round her.

“I see Eriksson,” she yelled.

His body stiffened, but he didn’t let go of her.

“I see him,” she repeated. “And I hear the mountain speak.”

He was silent.

“Eriksson isn’t nice,” she said after a time.

He released his grip. No longer held, she felt cold.

“The dead are supposed to travel,” he said. “If they stay, it brings problems.”

“But what’s holding him?”

“You see him, so you are.”

That was an awful thing to say. He pushed her to start moving and kept pushing to make her go forward.

His voice, behind her: “I couldn’t stop thinking about you. You asked questions. … If the spirits are calling you, Frederika, you have to respond.”

She tried to shut out his voice.

“It’s about protection for all of us. The signs are so bad. You can help us.

“Fearless used to have a drum,” he continued. “It helped him travel between worlds. It was his most important weapon. It kept him alive. But he burned it when he became a Christian.”

They reached her yard, and she kept walking because she knew he wouldn’t follow. He remained in the shadows.

She turned once. “Eriksson is mean. Why did Elin go with him?” she asked.

She imagined Antti shaking his head. When he spoke, his voice was hesitant. “In summer some of the reindeer don’t want to leave when it’s their time to roam. Perhaps Elin felt safer in captivity.”

Unable to see it, she knew the wound on her arm had begun to bleed.

In November it became yet colder, though that had hardly seemed possible. The air was so cold that their nostrils stuck together when they inhaled. They had frost spots on cheeks and earlobes, and the hair on the goats’ necks grew thick and long as a dog’s. The days were still shortening. Every morning night lingered, loitered by the steps of the porch, stuck to the icy branches of the spruce trees. Every evening it returned earlier.

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